Monday 14 December 2015

Create The Perfect Animation Demo Reel

What goes into a great animation demo reel? Putting together an excellent reel is the ultimate goal for all of our students here at Escape Studios. Your demo reel is the key to finding work in the industry.

So what are the secrets of a superb animation demo reel? We suggest that there are twelve rules for success.



Rule 1: Put your best shot first - and last
Put your best work first and last. Most studios will likely invest about ten seconds into watching your reel.  If they see weakness at the start, they won’t keep watching.  So start strong, and be sure to grab their attention.

Rule 2: A great demo reel should be free of mistakes
If in doubt… leave it out! If your demo reel has mistakes in it, the studio will notice, and they will weed out your reel. Why? Because they will assume one of two things: either you saw the mistake but could not fix it, or you didn’t see the mistake.

Rule 3: Customise your reel for the job
Don’t have a ‘one size fits all’ demo reel. Re-edit your reel to suit the job you are applying for. If you are applying for a job at Pixar, your reel will be very different to the one you show FrameStore. Why? Because Pixar specialise in cartoony animation, whilst FrameStore tends to do photorealistic creature work. Customise your reel to suit the studio. At your blog or website you should have a reel for character work,  and one for creature work. Don't confuse the two.

Be on linkedIn
Rule 4: Be Easy to find online
Your reel should be easy to find; hosted at your blog or website, your YouTube Channel, or at Vimeo. Make your your LinkedIn profile is up to date, has a link to your reel, and shows that you are available for work. Animation recruiters live on LinkedIn

Rule 5: Polish your work and learn Premiere or Final Cut
You are representing yourself to the studio. Presentation is important, so make sure that the edit looks nice. Learn Adobe Premiere so you can cut and re-cut your own reel.

Rule 6: Gather opinions from people you respect 
Find people who understand the industry you are applying for to help you review and critique your own demo reel. They’ll likely spot things you may have missed, and be able to offer a fresh perspective.

Rule 7: Remember that you and your friends are not the best judge of your own work
You’ve probably looked at it so many times that you replay it in your sleep. Your friends may say they like your reel because they like you and they do not wish to offend. So get impartial advice from a pro – and take it! Tough love will help you in the long run.

Rule 8: Keep it short - quality over quantity
A short reel with a few good shots is much better than a long reel with many weak ones. Remember that studios will not look at a long reel, at least not all the way through. Polish and perfect what you have, and discard the rest. One to two minutes is plenty.

Rule 9: Show your name and contact details at the front and at the end
Don't make it hard for people to find you. Include your full name, your website or blog, your email address and your telephone number. Make yourself easy to find. Email addresses should always be professional; avoid things like gr8lover@gmail.com.

Watch out for copyright
Rule 10: Be ready to go at short notice.
Jobs go fast; you need your reel to be ready to go at a moment's notice. See this post for why you need to act fast! If you see the job posted and then think "oh, I really need to work on my reel now" - it's too late.

Rule 11: Include a reel breakdown list on the reel at the end
If there is anything on the reel that you didn’t do, make it clear at the end, and give full credit to the creator. Don’t ever take credit for work which is not your own. Ours is a small industry, and you will get found out.
 
Rule 12: Don’t use copyrighted music on your reel
You will want to host your reel on YouTube and/or Vimeo. If you use music which is owned by someone else, your reel will be deleted for copyright violations.



---Alex

The Escape Studios Animation Blog offers a personal view on the art of animation and visual effects. To find out more about our new BA/MArt starting in September 2016, follow this link.   To apply, visit the offical page here.

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